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Dream or Vision of Himself Changed to a Destroyer or Riding a Buffalo Eagle

Black Hawk Native American

Not on view

This work is one of seventy-six drawings by Black Hawk that were bound into a book by William Edward Caton. Here, the artist depicts himself as a powerful supernatural being called a Destroyer. He rides a Buffalo Eagle, whose tail is represented by an arching rainbow. Spots representing hail cover both Buffalo Eagle and rider, and jagged power lines connect them.

The Black Hawk Ledger

Black Hawk’s style is typical of the early reservation period (ca. 1880–1900). Here, he uses minimal outlining and pattern, textured surfaces, and pale translucent color to animate his renderings of visions, ceremonies, battles, and animals of the Plains. He did not draw in a bound book, as was common, but on various sizes and types of lined paper. William Edward Caton, a trader at the Cheyenne River Sioux Agency in central South Dakota, offered Black Hawk fifty cents for each image, and later bound the seventy-six drawings into a book with a leather cover.

Dream or Vision of Himself Changed to a Destroyer or Riding a Buffalo Eagle, Black Hawk (Native American, Sans Arc Lakota (Sioux), South Dakota, ca. 1832–89), Ink and graphite on paper, Sans Arc Lakota (Teton Sioux)

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